Centimeter-scale, physiologically relevant intestinal organoids generated entirely from pluripotent stem cells

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Abstract

Over the past decade, intestinal organoids have shown great promise as a platform to study the development of intestine, elucidate the pathogenesis of diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and model physiological features of intestinal tissue for high-throughput drug screening. However, intestinal organoids derived from adult epithelial stem cells lack cellular diversity, especially those resides in the lamina propria. Intestinal organoids derived from embryonic stem (ES) cells or induced-pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) has greater cellular diversity, but are still limited in size and physiological features such as peristalsis. In this study, we generated centimeter-scale, full-thickness, and physiologically relevant intestinal organoids in suspension culture without usage of Matrigel. Using a series of optimized culture media, multiple lineages of cells were differentiated from iPSCs and spontaneously assembled to achieve the intestinal architecture. These bubble-like organoids have a thickness of 500 microns, exhibit a mature vasculature network, and have smooth muscle-like cells to conduct regular peristalsis. In addition, adipocyte-like cells and granulocyte-like cells are also observed in these organoids, which are important in immune homeostasis. Lastly, these organoids show mature crypt structures, response to lipopolysaccharides (LPS), and increases luminal influx upon forskolin treatment, suggesting the organoids have intact epithelial integrity. Thus, this study provides a highly reproducible approach to produce large and physiologically relevant intestinal organoids that are suitable for different biomedical applications.

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